"On behalf of the president and his administration, I extend the warmest of welcomes to each and every one of our Syrian arrivals, as well as the many other refugees resettled this year from all over the world," National Security Advisor Susan Rice said in a statement.
Rice said the number represented a "six-fold increase from the prior year," and called it "a meaningful step that we hope to build upon."
She noted that refugee admissions represented only "a small part of our broader humanitarian efforts in Syria and the region."
Frontline states like Lebanon and Jordan meanwhile have been all but overwhelmed, with each home to hundreds of thousands of refugees, and the arrival of streams of unvetted migrants on Europe's shores provoking a crisis.
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The Syrian refugees are chosen from United Nations camps and then vetted by US security and intelligence agencies. They are classified as "vulnerable," such as widows, the elderly and disabled.
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